History /
Poles and Falaise pocket - WWII [90]
Just as you can't bring knowledge to a brat and made him learn.
What knowledge??? Where are your links? Your proof??? What you only throw around are wild opinions, nothing else!
Even in Paris, they got less than 10% support.
Not that many French ladies welcomed the Nazis with open legs.
Most seemed to prefer poverty and near starvation with the ever present risk of being carted off to slavery in Germany to fornicating their way to luxury and syphilis.
You should read some more....
You are so wrong on so many accounts it's no funny even more.
Why don't you go to history boards where you can even today meet such "rapists, paedos and thugs"?
Why don't you read the new books which came out telling some uncomfortable truths about the german occupation in...say...France and how many french women enjoyed the Germans?
And who the hell made a representative poll at that time about the support???
You are talking out of your arse here Jeep...maybe you have an agenda or you prefer it would have been that way but the reality was much more different! Only little boys are unable to accept facts and to differentiate...boy!
timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article6078341.ece
..."I'm almost ashamed to say it," Fabienne Jamet, a madame at one of the top addresses, is quoted as saying, referring to debauched, champagne-drenched soirées, "but I've never had so much fun in my life. Those nights of the occupation were fantastic."
Not so black and white isn't it...
...Seldom has a book delved as deeply into what is regarded by many as a source of national shame: far from being forced into bed with the invaders through economic hardship (as the official history would have people believe), thousands of French women fell in love with German soldiersand it is estimated that 200,000 children were born to Franco-German couples during the war.
"That the departure of the Germans caused thousands of women deep affliction . . . is one of those facts that political necessity commands us to ignore," writes Buisson, director of France's History Channel and a presidential adviser. ...